And that treatise had a symbol, a picture of a triangle with 1, 2, 3 written on it — its three sides. And the fourth — there’s an arrow pointing to it. The fourth is on the other side. So even back then I was already showing the idea of the fourth world. But even when I was showing that fourth world and the volume seemed to be about death, I thought back then that it was the Sun. I thought it entered from there and spread across the three, so essentially, I was mistaken. But on the other hand, everything still fits. Because I drew a tetrahedron, which has four sides total. And I was exactly showing that I had already come to know the first, second, and third worlds — and in that treatise, as a prelude to the fifth volume, about death — I indicated that I was now speaking about the fourth face of the tetrahedron. So that’s exactly what it was. I was talking about the fourth side of the tetrahedron — about winter. Remember, even in the first volume, when I was finishing it, I said it was a triangle, and each side had three points, but there are four sides in total — and these are the seasons, the zodiac signs, all the months. That one side is, figuratively speaking, autumn. And that side of the triangle — autumn — has three corners: September, October, November. That’s how I decoded it back then. And again — where is the Sun? Now I understand Big Alexander’s joke, when he laughed and said: “And where did you hide the Sun — in which corner?” So that I would search — where is the Sun? Is it inside the triangle or where is it? It’s really a riddle. So there’s this tetrahedron, and it has four seasons, and the corners of each side are the months. Fine. Where is the Sun... Well okay, the tetrahedron spins inside the cube. What is that? It’s like everything is circling around it, right next to the answer, and yet it feels like a dead end. But again, the system controls this. You know everything always happens to me in a single day when the time is right. There will be that one day when I’ll say, “I figured it all out, guys, I’m off” — and that’s how it’ll be.
I have these thoughts — imagine spring arrives, March is the first month of spring, then April and May — three months, spring. Now let’s imagine the geometric figure of a tetrahedron, that is, a three-dimensional triangle. And we look at one of its faces as a flat triangle — that’s our spring. But what does this spring have, what does this triangle have? It has three corners. The three corners are, it turns out, March–April–May. And in essence,